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Venture into any bar in outback Australia and there’s a good chance your pint will be poured by a young woman on a working holiday visa. Pete Gleeson’s jaw-dropping documentary explores a world that feminism forgot through the experiences of two of them, Finnish backpackers Steph and Lina.

Penniless after being robbed in Bali, they sign up as live-in barmaids at the only pub in Coolgardie, a gold-mining town 560 km inland from Perth. The publican likes to keep things lively by turning over the bar staff, pretty much the town’s only young female population, every three months.

Having passed through Coolgardie a few times himself, Gleeson decided to stick around and observe the adjustments required of such outsiders to survive and even prosper in a world where they are greeted as ‘fresh meat’. He’s equally observant of the howling loneliness of the inebriated men who importune them: an ‘I fucked a goat’ t-shirt never looked so right before. Ushering unwelcome visitors from their rooms, Steph and Lina resist ‘adjustment’ with Nordic sangfroid, but their only friend is a hopeless lush and civilisation is a long way away.

V luchakh solnca

Vitaly Mansky

Shot with the permission and supervision of Pyongyang authorities, Under the Sun turns a North Korean propaganda exercise into a deep-cover documentary about life inside one of the world’s most repressive nations.

Australian Aboriginal actor David Gulpilil (Charlie’s Country) returns to his Arnhem Land hometown with filmmaker Molly Reynolds to explain ‘what happened to my culture when it was interrupted by your culture’.